It is a 20th century American/English student slang word meaning 'very big or gigantic.' It is supposed to come from the joining of the two words 'huge and monstrous'
You really shouldn't call people ingrates if you want them to find word origins.
From ancient Greece easy Google search dude really.
I dont know, ask easier questions next time
Etymology means the study of the origin of words.
"Junk" comes from the 15th century word, "Jonke". Its origin is unkown.
William David Alcorn and his friends were looking up at the clouds one day and saw a really big cloud they were learning about clouds in school and they dissent know what to call this cloud so thus the word humongous was born.
gigantischer
sachin is anxious about playing in fron of humongous home crowds.
Humongous
I believe you are referring to the word "humongous", which means extremely large or huge.
Indeed it is, however the word is correctly spelt 'Humongous', obviously meaning Huge; enourmous.
The word 'now' has its origin in Latin word 'nunc'.
humongous gigantic large
Well, honey, "humongous" may not be in the fancy-pants dictionary, but it's been slang for "huge" since the 1960s. So, technically, it's not a "real" word, but it's real enough for me. Just like how "hangry" isn't in the dictionary, but we all know what it means when someone gets cranky from hunger.
Yes it is from French origin.
Gigantic, Humongous, Huge, Great
Gigantic, Humongous, Colossal, Immense